Wichita Daily Times (Wichita Falls, Tex.), Vol. 26, No. 197, Ed. 1 Saturday, November 25, 1922 Page: 1 of 6
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I
1Dichila Mnilp /
5 2
.8
qe-
4
•A.
HANGING BY A THREAD
ELECTRA PROPERTY
4
* '
d .
TURKISH REQUEST
Ar
%
$
FOR NEUTRAL ZONE
C.
ine to
the., company.
HAS BEEN HELD UP
Bill
A
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)
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j
1
I
l
3/
tace had been working against ihe
8
plaint Euatace wrote that it wan
it seems to them desirable, to fill.
nc
Ufa
GLARENDON HIGH
FRIDAY AFTERNOON
a national pollcy but ona
only
8,
!
conferenoe
Turkey’s disposition of territorles
oil
t
PIER IS DESTROYED
Theodore Rtoomevelt
second
GO-GETTERS
EVOLUTIONS IN AIR
4
■
By
V
block stgnal houme at Moi
sta-
(I
ONLY
‘•AI
v
8
A
+
i
K EAT"E
- ---a
I
I
MG PEOPLE VOTE
EDISON IS GREATEST
PERSON IN HISTORY
U.S. INSISTS UPON
HAVING OPEN DOOR
POLICY FOR TURKEY
FORCE OF MEXICAN
REBELS DEFEATED;
MANY CASUALTIES
DANIELS CRITICISES
SENATE FOR FAILURE
TO WELCOME 'TIGER'
PRESS OF LONDON
SAYS EXECUTION OF
CHILDERS JUSTIFIED
'hen the
consider
FTP TIME TO THINK or
CHlISTMAB SHOPPING
a changed senate, and a changed
houne the bill - Would almost car.
SAFE AT BOMARTOM IS
HAULED OFF AMD ROBBED,
ABOUT $95.00 IS MISSIMC
PILOTLESS PLANE
PERFORMSUSUAL
NASHVILLE MAYOR
HASBEENQUSTED
BY CITY COUNCIL
Prof. John Tieman
Divorced Thursday
Has Married Again
the New York Eventi
and Wichita Daily "
i!
h
BUSS VALUE MAXWELL
POSTMISTRESS AT CLARA
FILLIBUSTER MAY BE
INVOKED IN SENATE
MAGNOLIA ADOPTS
GRAVITY BASIS IN
* PURCHASE OF CRUDE
Ing
Times,
23
MORE
SHOPPING .
DAYS
dpocun., ,
■
NO NATION WANT* TO GUAR-
" ANT RR PEACE IN THE
BALKAN*.
CONFERENCE ADJOURNS
SESSION IMMEDIATELY
GERMAN MINISTER OF
AGRICULTURE RESIGNS
1 THREE GROUP8 OF REPUBLIC:
AN BKNATORB OPPOSED
TO MESURE.
CLAnEXDOX, TICXAS, March 25.
— The Clarendon high school foot,
bait team continued its late neason
winning atteak when II turned the
tahles on Memphis hgh nehool team
Friday afternoon and defeated them
CHILO AMAZE8 OTHER DELE-
GATES AT LAUBANNE
- MEETING.
Such a Move Would Carry
Over to Besion of the
" New Congress.
AEICHSTAG HAS ENDORSED
DECLARATIOX or rOLICY
8
mide in DAvoHTEN or
A METHDDIST MINISrEN
RErUBLICANS CONFIDENT
BILL WILL rass HOUSE
Afternoom Meeting Resumes Die-
ousslon of Boundary
Auestion.
DALLAS, Nov. 22.—Crude Jit pur-
chase by the Magnolia Petroleum
company hereafter will be on the
gravity basts ucale. ranging from
9 cents to 11.(0 per darret, accord-
e
Associated Press —
PARIS, .Nov. »L—A eystem of
pllotless airplane controll has
paqped a two dny’a teat eatis-
Interests of the chureh the board
had dropped ma .name from the roll
Of membership. ' The vesolutjon also
tevoked bie authority to act aa a
teacher of Christian Seience,
in his reply to a letter from the
board foctying him of the com-
Proctor, treasurer of
Competition forced
report was not contirmed by either
the sellers or the purchaser, ii la
understood that the trade-wwbet
i sloned as soon as title ia approved
and elections. Since it is apparent
that an fmportant section of the
republican party wants certain lek-
. . .. . .. ----" - nil
EUSTACE IS DISMISSED | SILENT DRAMA WITHIN
FROM CHRISTIAN SCIENCE RANKS OF THE TURKS
CHURCH RESULT OF SUIT Lender or Delegation „ aenimeiy
- Seeking a Reasonable
Peace.
By MARK RULLIVAN
National Political Corresponden of
DALLAB, Nov. M — Pollee and the
sheritr’s department are Inventigat-
lag the disappearance of B. H. ah In-
noll. 30 ream old. operator at the
$
I
BOSTON.’ Nov. 25,—Diamtasaf fret"
the Christian selenee church of
this action. he said.
Heretofore the Magnolia has paid
$125 a barrel for Oklahoma and'
August. Kan., and II.M for north |
and west Texas crude. The new
prices on Auguste, .Suahtne. Yale 1
Comanche and Duncan, Okla., and
on Electra, Burkpurnett, Henderson
Strawn, Moran. Ranger and Stept-
ens county. Toxas, follows:
Below IS gravity. »• cents: 28 to
29, gravity.-BIX « to M », 51.10; i
33 to 34.9, Bi.**: is to ss.s. HAO:
ST to SS.S. $160; SI gravity end
over, Si.se.
theit recent adversity. In the Judg-
TME WEATHER
wiesa Fade Md VMM
iagsganl”az.
veratuke
with Shnkespeare, Langtellow, Ten-
nyson. Hoover. Dicken», General
Pershing Lloyd-George and Vol-
stead following in the order named.
SIGNAL OPERATOR
ATDALEASSTATION
HAS DISAPPEARED
______7 2-
HOME
EDITION
---------
tlon. who waa laet seen late yes-
teray.
When train No. IS on the Texas
A Paeitte railroad reached the sta-
tion yesterday the switch waa elomed
and the blogks locked. Skinnell
was gone and no trace of him had
been found, although sevetat hun-
dred petsons mearehed the vicinity
of the block houne. v
Traffic east and eoath bound on
the Mouston A Texas Central. the
Texas A New Orleans aad the Tezam
A Pacific linen was tied up for store
than three hours awaiting opening
of the,awiteh which controls pas-
eage through the Dallas terminals
-
about to
The FovCa ed Mo CBM
the bdy stooa on the phrnte deck
wseuce all but .Mm had na:
"Dear me, the place la burnjeg upt
•111 beat it eutek," he a*M. _
The want ad page had be beorbed" J
The *tartiei lad turned pale-> S
“I noticed not the spreadinu flames
While reading cars for Bals'*
tainly fall:- '
Of couree Jt. ta not to be expected
that the opphents of the, hill
have things wholly their own way
in this ‘esnion. One of the most
noticeable things about the regular
repyblican leaders and the friends
of Herding is their equanimity about
BERLIN, Nov. IS.—The reichstas
today voted Ue approval of the mo-
tion made by the German democrats
endorsing the government’s decla-
ration of pollcy. All parties voted
for the motion with the exception of
the communists and three members
nt the anti-Semitie party, who cast
their votes agalnat approval.
. HARDIN6‘S FRIEN0S
| TO FIGHT H1BD FOR OF O’DONAHUE ET AE
SHIP SUBS10Y DILL BOUGHT BY TEXHOMA
2*************
$ TWO BrUDNrs zosE
4 LIVES IX A vmm
hold that power under the city
charter, no charges being brought
agalnat him. One vote brought the
downfall of the.chief executive, the
action coming Sb a surprise to him
and his supporters
Percy (harps, former member of
the county court and business man,
was elected to the office of mayor
aw soon as it was declared vacant
Mayor Wilson’s dowatai followed
ths refusal of the cotneh to oenfirm
his appointees as member of tks
board of education. It was charged
by ooms the mayor purponed tore-
move from office H. C. Weber, su-
perintendent of city, schoola.
Another contributing cause was
belleved to have been the recent ex-
pulsion of five members of the city
deteotive force. who were charged
with perntelous political activity
against the mayor during bla cam-
paign for electton In March, 1921.
Part of the holdings are in the
nameot-the Petroleum Producers:
company, and part are held by In-
dlriduals. The 4enl ieludes acme
xaluable productipn, both deep and L
shallow. In the south Electra die- '
trlct. The Montgue county hold-
the atrepgth o t
the forces In op-
oosition, especi~
»lly in ths sonata.
It is true that the
aggregate of these
-------forces la a bare
EULliva t half of the aenata.
If that. "
Aa things.stand now. If the bill
ahould come to a vote in the senate
it would probably pass or not pass
by not more than two or three votes
either way. But the opposition is
By Associated Preen •
- LONDON, Nov. II.—The place of
to the offset that.after Childers had
1 not been ottictally announced this
morning. -Someteports cay that it
F occurred at Beggars Rush barracks
and others ag Portocello barracka
The Dublin Ezpross states posi-
tively that Chnders was shot by a
1 fring squad at Kllmainham jall. The
Ewapaper quotas a statement.by
1 4*o republican publicity department
to the effect that after Chilers had
been told the execution was to take
place ho roauostad to see a protes-
I tant clerzyian whomha had known
as a boy. The minister was with
him the statement said, when he
walked to bla executiou. He spoke
no word to his executioners.
The execution of Chiidere, eaya
the Times editorially today. is juati-
, • fiable on the grounds that there ia
nu dittxonce between hi case and
that of the four others executed in
Dublin recently. - , •
“The fact that Chuders was an
Enigtishman." It proceeds, "in no
m wise artects the issue. However
much Englishman may resretthat
hla brilliant talents had not been
used to inculcate in Irish extremists
the English virtue of compromtse in
matters political’ we hold it was his
right to throw in his lot with Ire-
„ land and exert in behalf of hla con-
- ceptton of the Irish people’s inter-
— -enis the unusual powers he pos-
sessed. *o doing he took his life in
his hands and with a personal cour-
age beyond cavil faced the con-
suences of his action.
"He challenged the only consti:
tutea authority in the country and
met Ais doom. That authority had
M choice but to accept hla chai
longe or abdleate ell title to lawful
a truteeship for the' welfare of the
A state. The free state government
.-F mede their cholce with a oorage
certainly not inferior to that of
their adversarles and with a re-
1 eponsibiity far graver. We believe
< the verdict of the eivnized world
W on thetdectsion will be that it was
‘ right.".
LAUSANNE. Nov. tl.—The re-
quest of the Turkish delegates to
tha nsar east conference for a neu-
tral zone on Turkey's western
boundary has been held up, appar-
ently because no nation wants to
guarantee peace in any Balkan
aona Ismet Pasha’s statement that
, • ON uvxakn (TRIKE X
I ♦ FOR fait 21 DATS +
l' X DUBLIN. Nev.U—The eon.
A dition of Miss Mary Mac-
I A Swiney. who has been on a
A hunger atrike in Mount Joy
A Prison for-TI—Sers, wae re-
A ported as unchanged today
evidence by the board would be a
mere formality. Tha complainta
charged that Eustace made false
er-
or
V
republican party wants certain lek; tackle for the touchdown and win-
illation for the rellet of farmers itning points. Uoldston scored s
This resolution paid that after sx- I Turkey denired the powers to guar-
amination of compiaints that Mus- , neutralt. -or _ 2 26
tace hail been working iriir.n the' ante the neutrality of a belt SO
The South Electra holdings of 1
’John O’Donohue.L T. Burn*. W. M. i
Priddy, C. E. atcemtehen and others j
have oeu sold to the Texhoma com-
-pany for a consideration of $425,000,
it waa learned Saturday. While the
der consideration and
agreement of 1*10—are coneonant
with the principle of the equality
of economic opportunity. It Ie as-l
Burned that the alli4 powers will
not now desire, and do not intend
to carry, into effect previous ar-
rangementa of this nature.
"•to United States has no desire
to take, any betion which might
embarrass Uto allied powers in the
By Assoclated Press.
MEXICO CITY, Nov. 54—A force
of rebels under General Miguel Ale-
man has been decisively defeated
by federal troops at Vidrlo, in the
state of Vera Cruz, according to a
government statement. The rebels
suffsred many casual tlaa
General Guadalupe Benches, com-
mander of the federal forces in that
aistrict, is pronecuting a vigorous
campaign against the rebels.
BERLIN. Nov. ((.—Dr. Herman
Mueller, minister of agriculture and
food controller in the new cabinet
of Chancellor Cuno, resiened hie of-
fice today. The resignation came
after attacka made in the reichstag
upon the minister by soetalists who
accused him of having actively par-
ticipated in the Rhineland beparatist
movement in 1919.
_____ . ings of the ^bmpeay do not figure
Poet -' 'in’the deal. . .
• WINNIPEG. MANITOBA,
A Kev. 25,—Two students lost
A their lives and to other* were
A Injured today when fire de-
A stroye4 St. Boniface college,
A one of the oldest and mox
A noted Canadian Catholic in-
A htituttons The famous Jehuit
A library alee waa destroyed.
HIC4o. Nov. 23- Thomas A.
Edison Ims been voted the greatest
man in history by approslinately
750.000 young peonle of the Metho-
dist Episcopal church, according to
thaEpwortb Herald, official chureh
orAn, <
ptoper effort, to wecure peace. It
desires pothlng which need con-
flict with the ■ interests of other
countrtex, if the principle of com-
merefat opportunity for all nations
1* recognised at the outset.
“The United State* bar no inten-
ton of seekine for Itaelt or ith na-
tionals a position ot special privi-
lege but it desires to protect Ite
right and to asxure the open doer."
Upon concluding thia reading,
Ambassador Child went on:
■ "Thio' conference may be glad to
know that the overwhelming senti-
ment of the peoples of the United
States ie in favor of this policy, not
I SOUTH BEND, IND., Nov. 25.—
Whan informed that, her former
busband had been married to Mrs.
Erimmer, Mra. Tiernan Slated that
aha did not know tha woman but
et she had frequently heard Prof.
Hernan apeak of a "Blanche" whom
he some day expected to marry.
AS the statements were generaily
made in the form of a Jest, she
’ - stated aha paid no attention to
them. So far aa he knowe the
new bride had never been in South
Bend.
ment of many are too little disposed .
- DEFEATS MEMPHIS
argue that the thing to do la to
atand pat and wait for the wheel of
political fate to complete another
circle. Some, of them affect to he-"
Hleve that aa' the pendulum swung
violently pne way during the.years .
from 1920/to 1922, It may swing with
equal vtolence the other way during
and gmialending atatements in the
bill in equity and attempted lu pre-
vent the directors from exercleing
the powers relating to.the publish-
ing socigix, which they maintained
---- ha<l beq< .donferred upon them by
wilt -Mm. Marv Raker Eddy, founder of
---- the chureh.
Herbert W. Euatace, who ae a
trualev of the Christian-Science
Publishing woctety, joined in - the
filing of the bill in equity against
tbs. directors of the church which
resulted in prolonged litigalTon, wae
made known yesterday. The di-
rectora made- public correspondence
pausing between Eustace and the
board and a copy of a resolution
passed by the directors on October
14th.
HANSELL, IOWA, Nov. 25.-
Blanche Brimmer, who married
Prod. Job a P. Tiernan of Notre
Dame, le the daughter of Rev. and
Mrs. Charles H. Hawn, a Methodist
minister bore.
including the Mesopotamia
fialda .
WASHINGTON, Nov. 25.—The last mg reparations decisions under con-
day of general debate waa ahead of ditlona which would result In flat
the shipping blit when th* house , rejection or total evasion of ths
convened today with the confidence (recent German note, whleh ia an in-
of republican leaders that It would tegral part ot Herr Cuno’s pro-
pass by a safe margin next Wednes- gram. *
day. Aseurtncea to thia effect were I ■
taken to the white house by Repro-
2 FIDE
memher"tiatnhaufanANnAnr in gonn nnn
--"2 0 J3UU,UUU
the years from 1922 to 1*! 4.
Hardimw’s Hleetten Lesnon
There is some evidence that Hard-
Ing Rejsonelly takes the mandate of
the recent election more seriously
thian,some of the other leadere do
^Harding does not regard himneit
aa having a franchino to be a
standpatter. In his eyes his fran-
chise ia to carry out the prevailing
will of .the republican party, aa ex-
vressedr in conventtons, primarien.
i amvoixLs WICHITA FAI^TPAS, SATURDAY. NOVEMBER ' NUMBKB 1W ~
$425,000 DEAL MADE INOIL ACREAGE
I --5- ‘ --------— 1 : — i —--sitl- ' ""
BERMAN LEGAGV ID
VERY in TANGLEO
ECONOMIC PROBLEM
-I •
about, even if all
your hopes were
centered on Ite
paninge. you
would be com-
pele to admit
BERLIN, Nox. II—The new gov-
ernment assumes a 'legacy which
consist chlefty of an almoet hope-
lessty tangled internal economic,
financial and socfai situation, while
the prospects of foreign compllca-
lions threatened by impending a-
tion by ths entente in connection
with the reparations today was
viewed among the reichstag parties
as already sufficiently tangled and
menacing to bring havoo to Herr
Cuno and his non-partisan cabinet
sooner than be or hie well wishers
suspect. ...
ortielai and non-otticlal etreles
nrofeks to aee in fresh realignments
abroad, as reported from Lausanne,
Parla and London, the almost certain
portion that Germany la about to
be bartered -away across the en-
lente’s international bargain coenter
In that concessions to Franco in
connection with the reparations so-
lution will be the price paid by Eng-
land and Italy in return for political
benefita elsewhere.
The recent pour parlors between
Marquis Curson, the British foreign
secretary, French Premier Poincare
and Premier Mussoulihi of Italy,
and M. Clemenceuu’s tour of the
United Blates, are quickening Ger-
man apprehensions, being interpret-
ed as destined to exert an immediate
. If not final, bearing on the tmpend-
which, wore it to be adopted by
every nation on earth, woula be in
contract perhaps to the search for
territorial or other special privi-
leges on foreign nolle, the powerful
element in the establishment of any
stable ponce, the foundation ««or
greater equity in the relatione" of
nation with nation and n baste for
more progrensive economic devel-
opment of territories."
Th|a emphatic reiteration of
America’s oppositton to the division
of Turkey into special sones of
commercial and economle influence
waa regarded by the representa-
tivee as especlally elgnlflcant at
thia time, when boundaries are un-
(Copyright, 1*12. by ths Ns* fork
Eyeninz Post.!
wAsHINgFroN, Nov. i;.—Even if
you were *n ardent advocate of
A merlon having a great merchant
marine. even If
h you bellevePresi-
lent Harding’s
roponal to be the
mly practical way
of bringing It
the more determined and truculent, apparent that a consideration of the
and having th* greater dynamic
quality, they will net hentte. IT
will be Harding's pleasure to try to
provide it.
To get back to the shipping bill,
the regular republican leader and
the friends of Harding will fight
every lech of the way to make the
measure a success. Harding’s speech
not only stimulated them, but by Its
fairness and firmnens imprensed
many who had not made up their
mindn on their position.
There wae a high note in Hard-
ing’s appeal to judge the bill ■■ a
matter ot national policy rather
than by the log rolling test of
whether sedividual congressional
district, would be benetitted.
The opposttton to the bill in the
senate will include, on party
grounds, practically alt of the dem-
oerata except a few from states like
Louisiana, which have a direct in-
terest in shipping.
The repubiican senators who will
oppose the bill Include three zroups
Th* farm bloc generally will oppose
it merely because it has the nature
of a subsidy. Another very small
group, led by LaFollette will op-
pone the bill because they nre al-
most fanatically in favor of going
on with government ownorahip. St III
another group will help in the ef-
fort to carry the bill over into the
next sesslon on the theory that the
matter shoula not be dotded by tn*
present congress, which ha* just
been rebuked at the poll*, but by the
new congress which haa recently re-
cetved tha peopies mandate. In the
senate It la so easy, comparatively
to filibuster tbs bill ofer into the
nsxt esuiontbat this looks like the
more probable outcome.
HAMMOND, IND., Nov. (I.—Prof.
John P. Tieman of South Bend, Ind.,
and Mra. Blanche J. Brimmer of
Hannell, Iowa, were married this
morning by Justice Howard Kemp
ai^CroW a Point, Ind. Th* professor,
w Btis divorced on Thursday from
his wits. Mrs. Augusta Tiernan,
principal in ths Tiernan-Poulin pa-
teraty case at South Bend, gave his
age as 82 The bride gave her age
Ths iense for the marriage wae
issued at Crown Point thio morning
and the couple went at once to Jus-
tice Kemp.
After the ceremony they left
Crown Point immediately without,
co far as knowd.mentionlng their
destination.
The bride at the tssuance of the
lio9ee stated she wae a widow,
vonsn WIFE DOBS
NOT KNOW THE BRIE
ory, according to experts
supervised the trials with a
horsepower passsngsr cat-
euch, for example, sa the Ehparut-* ♦♦♦ ♦ **** ♦♦♦♦♦♦
buetu. the bill over into the next
sesaton. In the next nession, with
> .
BOMARTON, TEXAR Nev. 25-
Oaee Holland’s confection store waa
broken into Thursday night. The
eurgiars carried oft hie safe with
around ((( la IL Nothin* else was
molestea. No trace of. the burglar#
kaa been found oo far. how ever 'there
was an Oklahoma car standing by
the |M« of the highway in ths night
sssn by parttes living here.
J. A. Church knocked ble ey* out
with a nati while working on tale
born. He hit the uall with hie ham-
mer. the nail flew off and the point
of tt pierced hie eye ball.
B. R. Caltee has let a oontract for
the construction of a brick building
on his lot on Main street.
• •w
kitometers wide on eaqh sids of ths
Turkish-Bulgarian and Turco-Gre-
clan frontier along the Marina
river, brought no definite dectston
by (be power*. It i* evidently agreed. .
that the neutgality question could
be disposed of later, at the time of
the expected discussion on the Dar-
danelles question.. >
Dedeageth end Karagatch ale two
name*'which are heard in the con-
ference halla and hotel lobblgs with
the. regularity With which JFIume
waa disqusned in many tonguee kt
Parla during the peace conference.
The Bulgarian* and the Greekn each
profesa a material Intereat la the
। former.
M. Venizelom. former premier of
Greece in an tnpassionea audience
with th* journaifatn. explained that
Greece could not give up thin vil-
lage at the month of th* Marina to
the Bulgarian*.
Premier Stamboulisy was equal-
ly insintent that Bulgaria could not
retain her economic polse. It denied
thlB port o she Aegean. 7 <
Karakatch’ts in dispute between
Turkey end ? Bulzaria, it iles just
west of Adrianople .end Is the rail-
-way terminal of that city. The
Turks contend they cannot detend
Adrianople uniess they have Kara-
gatch.' On the other hand the Bul-
garians say that if Turkey contreis
the look it will be Imposnible tor
them so enjoy free railway oom-
munfcaton to the Aegean even if
they ara given a port to tha eouth-
'ward. —-- ■ -
• Heat Drams Pinyed.
Few people here apparently are
ware of the silent drama whlel
daily ia being played in the rankp
of the Turkish delegation. A ma-
jority of the European delegatee are
convinced that Ismet Pasha, leader
of the Turkish delegation. Ie genu-
inely peeking a reasonable peace,
because Ismet realixes ibat Turkey
needs tranquiuty snd friendly re-
lationn with Europe, and above all,,
capital with which to develop Tur-’
key. for Turkey is poor in money.
With Ismet are aeverat mtn. some
of whom keep in obacurity, watch-
ink kin every move. These eilens
observers represent either the bol-
shevik element In Turkey or are
pronounced reactionaries who hate
any concessions to non-Mohamme-
dan Europe.
They have been llkeasd in con-
terence cireles to the commtssaribe
of the French revolution, who spied
on the revolutionary leaders like
Robespierre and Dsnton who pos-
sessed such sinister power. The
necret French commissaries had the
guillotine os their weapon.
The Turkish weapon ia not known
but some of the observers affset to
feel that Ismet must watch hla stej
in dealing with capitalistie and
Christian Europe and America The
apprehension it felt by some of the
European delegates that the power-
ful men behind the mcenes will force
Ismet into makiie demands whieh
cannot possibly bo accepted.
PHILADELPHIA, Nov. 21.— Dam-
age caused by a fire which last
night destroyed a 600-toot pier and
I* cars and four ecows, all leaded
with coal, today was estimated at
$300,000. The pier was owned by
the Phtladetphla end Weeding rail-
road. At least 1,100 tons of an-
thracite and 8,000 tons of bitumi-
nous coal were burned, It was stated.
Place kick in the try for point after
touchdown. After this, neither side
scored although Clarendon threat-
ened twice. Memphis was unable
to pierce the local defense past the
20 yard Iine. The game ended with
the balloon on Ctarendon’s 4* yard
line, where the Memphis lads had
placed It in a desperate attempt to
ecore by means of the forward pass:
The stars for Clarendon wore Ciark,
Goldston and Ingram. For the la-
Itora Cohen played well both on
the defense and offense.
NASHVILLE, TENN, Nor. 25.—
For the second time in its history.
Nashvile experienced a changs in
eity government last night through •
the medium of ouster law.:
Eight years ago Hilary B. Howse
was expelled from office by court
procedure after exposure of tinan-
cial Irregularities in department
under his control as commissioner
and mayor. Last night Felx-Z. Wil-
son. tor 1( months mayor of ths
city, was summarily ousted by the
members of ths city council, who
1 "rying government biplane that
flew over Etampes aviation
field on Wednesday and Thurs-
day for meverat hours. Ths
plans going aloft with no one
aboard, responded to control by
Mertzlan waved from the
ground. performed all the
customary evolutions and than
landed sately. '
During the testa ths machine
wan trequentiy Jost from sight
in base and clouds hot It was
always under control.
h
WASHINGTON, Kev. ((.—Hrs
Vallie Maxwell has been named to
succeed Pearl Carter as postmis-
tress at Clara. Wichita county, Mra.
Mary He Ina appointed August 1».
has deenined to serve.
by the score of 7 to 0. This earn*
In the. way of vevenge. Insomuch
SB tbo vinitors won an early season
game from the Clarendon boys.
The game was hard-fought in a
muddy field, which of couree made
the game slow. No one scored un-
til the second quarter, when Clark
of Clarendon plunged through left
NBWARK, N. J i Nov. XL—Josephus
Daniels, former secretary of the
navy, last night criticised members
of ths United Battea aenata for their
failure • to weicome George Clem-
encedu, formet premier of France,
now visiting in thin country.
“I felt ashamed." said Mr. Dani*!*,
"when senators of the United Slates
'failed to give a welcome ' to the
Tiger of France.> He is telling us
some unpalatable truthe, it is true,
and while We may not concur in
soine, yet I think that a man of (I
with hie ambitions 'behind him.
might be listened le at least with
rospect." ,
"e
LAUSANNE Nov. 14—Richard
Washburn Child, chief American
spokesman at Aho near eastern con-
ference. amaxed the other delega-
tions at thia morning'a session by
reiterating the , ipsistence of the
United Bialon upon the open door
policy in TurTte. He read th# aldo
memofre delivered on October 30 to
Great Britain, Franco and Italy, and
said the American government and
public supported thia policy.
The conference adjourned Ita
morning session immediately after
the completion of Ambassador
Chuld’s statement and will resume
the discussion of boundarles this
afternoon;
Mr. Child spoke os follows:
“It is not snd will not bo tho con-
cern of ths representatives of ths
United States to express at this
corference views which have not
for their basis the legitimate na-
tional interests of the United States
or those of humanitarian consider-
ation which I assume are shared by
every delegation present,
"We will, therefore, and I trust
acceptably, state, when the occasion
arises, the position of the "United
States. We believe that a conven-
ient and appropriate occasion now
has arisen.
"It is not unknown to those who
have observed the history of con-
ferences and negotiations that few
subJects may be considered by
themselves .1 note, referring to the
specific subject under discussion,
that all ths various points of nego-
tiation must in ths sad bs consid-
ered as a unit, and It la oftan trua
that not ona dQall of nezotiations
can be considered as issolated from
the others,
“The representatives of tho Unit-
ed States are unable therefore to
hear concluded the discussion of
any territorial settlement which In
its turn may affect other mettie-
ments without drawing the atten-
How of the popferepet fo pvrfoiw
traditional principles of the foreign
policy of America.
"Reference to this policy was
made in an aids memoirs delivered
to tho ministars of foreign affairs
of ths three inviting powers on Oo-
tobsr 30, loss than on* month ago."
_' Clauwen Are nena.
Hors Hr, Child rand the qlaunes
from ths American communication
relating to the opposition of the
United Blates to secret treaties snd
agreementa, especlally to those pro-
viding for nones of special eo-
nomle and commercial Influence in
Tarkey ae follows:
, “As the object in view In submit-
ting this sugsestion. (that la to
send observers to Lausanne) is the
elimtnation of any possible cause of
misunderstaitding It is considered
appropriate to ean attention to the
attitude of the United States in re-
upset to secret trestles end agree-
ments
“It is not felt that arraneements
previbusly made with respect to
Turkish territory which provide
for the establishment of zones of
ebeclal end economic infiuence-
the measure, will Hi Representative ;
Gahn, Ohio, a republican member of
the merchant, marine committee
which framed it, adhovinged that he
would not vote for a bill which he
said had been jammed through the
committee. He said • tig pussage
would mean "the certain crushing ot
tbs republican organisation two
yean hence." Dellvering the princi-
pal attack on the bill. Representa-
Use Davie . of Tennessee, democrat,
member of the merohant marine
oommittee declared it Maska* '
would bring “the worst scandal in
the history of the American repub-
iie" while Representative Jetkrles
of Nebraska, republican member of
the committee, supportlag IL asked
why cougress "should shy at tho
msro bQadow of tho word subsidy
when it means a saving of $20,000,-
000 a year to tho tax payers."
Ths aenata having agreed to a
final vote Monday on the $5,000,000
Liberian loan measure, wee in ad-
journment today while the house de-
bated the shipping bill.
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Wichita Daily Times (Wichita Falls, Tex.), Vol. 26, No. 197, Ed. 1 Saturday, November 25, 1922, newspaper, November 25, 1922; Wichita Falls, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1583544/m1/1/: accessed July 9, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Texas State Library and Archives Commission.